Review Blog

Mar 09 2017

A girl called Owl by Amy Wilson

Macmillan, 2017. ISBN 9781509832460
(Age: 9 -14) Highly recommended. A wondrous winter read, A girl
called Owl is magical, with relatable characters, adventure
and beautiful prose. With a strange name and a father she has never
met, Owl is finding things difficult. Her best friend is also having
a bad time with her parents separating and there is a strange new
boy at school who has noticed that she has weird frost patterns on
her skin. Then using her new powers she enters the mysterious world
of winter finding links to her father, who has only been described
by her mother as if he belonged to a folk story.
The author has written an engrossing story that combines the
everyday problems that Owl faces, of fitting in, wanting to know her
father, and supporting a friend in need with a wonderful winter
world peopled with Jack Frost and the fay. Her writing also reflects
these two different worlds: the everyday one is written in a
straight forward way while the descriptions of the winter world are
lyrical and memorable. Delightful sketches of an owl in different
poses are on the chapters about Owl icicles and leaves adorn the
chapters peopled by mythical creatures.
Owl is a feisty and caring heroine, who faces danger and adventure
in a winter world, and readers will be engrossed with the way she
finally meets her powerful trickster father and how she manages her
powers in a cold world.
The combination of mythology, magic and a haunting landscape make
this a memorable debut that is sure to entrance its readers.
Pat Pledger